Facebook to allow unique user URLs

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Steve Chiotakis: The social website Twitter has yet to find a way to make much money on the Web. But apparently it's doing a good job of it for Dell. The computer maker says it brought in more than $3 million in sales over the last two years from Twitter followers who clicked through Dell tweets to buy equipment. Twitter hasn't ruled out charging companies in the future for doing what Dell has done.

Over at social Internet rival Facebook, it's not hardware, but a personalized URL that people will be searching for tonight. And it's free. Mitchell Hartman reports.

Mitchell Hartman: Each of Facebook's 200 million or so users will be able to register their name as a personalized URL. The addresses can't be transferred or sold.

And why is this such a big deal? Well, right now, my public Facebook profile comes up in a Google search as a random string of numbers.

Zeus Keravala: Having Facebook.com/12345 isn't as easy as Facebook.com/bob.